Photo by Kyle McInnes
Indycar’s return to Milwaukee- and its racing roots- turned out be the perfect mix of great crowds, great racing, and great weather. The leadup to the race was filled with concerns on all fronts, but as the Friday morning rain and clouds cleared, so did the worries about what was in store.
I had some indication that attendance would be better than expected on Friday when I got caught in the garage pass redemption line which went about halfway into the tunnel. It reminded of the Legends’ Day autograph line at IMS. Perhaps the organizers can find a spot behind the grandstands or have multiple points for distributing wristbands like some other tracks do.
The upper deck was very near capacity on Saturday while the lower sections did not seem that full. On Sunday the upper deck was about 90% of Saturday’s crowd, but the lower decks looked significantly fuller. I wonder if Saturday’s race brought some folks out who hadn’t considered coming.
Everyone seemed to have a great time, and it was a race crowd. They were on their feet for restarts, and when there were passes for the lead.
One thing I would like to see added for 2025 is a scoring pylon. The promoters had three video boards on the front stretch, well spaced so that every fan had access , but the angle of the sun made them hard to see for most of yesterday.
Short Track Racing- More, Please
Saturday and Sunday were examples of the best of short track racing. Both races, while completely different in tone and style, featured the best elements of the sport. Early contenders faded while others found the right combination and put themselves in the mix. Favorites had issues and dropped out. The winner was in doubt until the final handful of laps. A race fan can’t ask for more.
Notes
Kudos to Firestone and Indycar for figuring out the oval package after the debacle at Iowa.
I wish Milwaukee had the double header slot on future calendars, and Iowa went back to a single race.
Will Power’s spin may have cost him his shot at the title. He gained only 10 points on Alex Palou on a day when he could have grabbed the lead. Palou needs only to finish ninth or better at Nashville to clinch his second consecutive crown.
The two podiums had six different drivers representing five different teams, including a first time podium for Juncos Hollinger Racing.
Pato O’Ward broke the Team Penske oval winning streak Saturday, but Scott McLaughlin got them back on track yesterday.
I hope the momentum from this past weekend carries over to the season finale in Nashville i9n two weeks’ time. There is an actual title fight happening this year, and I am ready for it.







